Jack Alban Trending You’re if you let any of these popular beauty products touch your skin. That seems to be the message behind Isabella’s ( ) viral TikTok where she walks through a T.J.
Maxx and tells people which specific items and brands to avoid. While many thought she was right on the money with her professional opinions, others said that they quite enjoyed using some of the products she referred to in her video. “An estheticians nightmare,” Isabella writes in a text overlay of the video before showing a pink package of “Make-Up Removing Cleaning Wipes” by Precision Beauty that contain Retinol.
She questions the ingredient, writing, “Like why does ur makeup remover need retinol?” writes that retinol is a fantastic inclusion as part of one’s skincare routine, as it “wins the valedictorian title in the skincare class,” while going on to explain that it’s “a derivative of Vitamin A,” and “reigns supreme in anti-aging efforts. However, the same company remarked that the stuff is not really effective when it comes to removing makeup from one’s face. In fact, the article writes, “Let’s cannonball into this ocean of inquiries with the $64,000 question: Does retinol remove makeup? Well, folks, it’s about as capable of that as a goldfish biking the Tour de France.
In other words, it’s, um...
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not very capable of that. Retinol, in essence, is a beauty prodigy but certainly no makeup remover.” Retinol in makeup wipes wasn’t the only be.
